Tennis

Venus Williams loses, Murray advances at Australian Open

Venus Williams of the United States makes a backhand return to Johanna Konta of Britain during their first round match at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016.(AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Venus Williams tried to rally, winning two games and getting another break-point chance after falling a set and 5-0 behind, before her 16th trip to the Australian Open finished in a first-round loss to Johanna Konta.

The 35-year-old, seven-time major winner trudged off Rod Laver Arena, waving to the crowd at 1:55 p.m. on the second day of the tournament following a surprising 6-4, 6-2 loss to the No. 47-ranked Konta, a Sydney-born British player who was making her debut in the main draw at the Australian Open after losing twice previously in qualifying.

Andy Murray opened with a 6-1, 6-2, 6-3 win over Alexander Zverev, sand remains very much a round-by-round proposition at Melbourne Park, where he has lost the final four times. He had Amelie Mauresmo, a new mother, back in his coaching corner for the match and was happy not to get any mid-match news from home. He has said he'll leave immediately, regardless of the stage of the tournament, if his wife, Kim, goes into labor in London with their first child.

Article continues below ...

''I'm more excited than nervous now,'' Murray said of the pending arrival. ''I don't have any news because I've just come off the court. I'm hoping my phone hasn't been buzzing in my bag. But Kim will message my team if anything's going on during the matches, and I'll see what happens.''

Williams had a career comeback last season, winning three titles, finding some consistency after a long struggle with illness and finishing the year in the top 10 for the first time since 2010. She reached the quarterfinals at the Australian and U.S. Opens – the first and last majors of the year.

In 2016, she's 0-2 after also losing in a warmup tournament at Auckland, New Zealand.

It was the eighth time she's lost in the first round of a Grand Slam tournament and the third in Australia, where she reached the quarterfinals in her first appearance in 1998 and lost the final to her youngest sister, Serena, in 2003.

Konta was really going for her groundstrokes in a high-risk, high-reward approach that kept Williams, who had wrapping on her left leg, on the defensive.

''When the draw came out and I saw who I was playing I was like `Well, ok, I just hope to stay out there more than an hour,''' Konta said in a post-match TV interview, apparently as surprised as anyone after her straight sets win over the No. 8-seeded Williams.